Why I finally said yes to that full frontal nude scene, by Wolf of Wall Street's Margot Robbie

Going full frontal nude in a film that will be seen by millions of people around the world isn't easy.

But Margot Robbie decided that the risks and repercussions would be worth it to be a part of The Wolf Of Wall Street.

The 23-year-old admits she was nervous about images of her naked body ending up all over the internet when she accepted the role of Jordan Belfort's second wife Naomi in Martin Scorsese's Oscar-nominated drama.

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Scorsese's fox: Margot Robbie was concerned for her family's sake about being nude in The Wolf Of Wall Street, but decided the role justified it

Margot told Britain's LOOK magazine: '[Nudity is] different in this day and age, because of the internet. It was like, if I do this there will forever be YouTube clips of this, there will be slow-motion versions.

'It's not just the repercussions for myself - my brothers and my grandparents have to deal with that. So it's not something to be taken lightly.'

However, the Australian actress felt it was worth the risk for the role because playing Leonardo DiCaprio's on-screen wife was a once in a lifetime opportunity, and the character justified the nudity.

E-nudes! She mentioned that she was especially concerned that her nudity would be heavily circulated on the internet, where her family wouldn't be able to ignore it

Lust in Wall Street: Margot plays Naomi, the second wife of Jordan Belfort. The two have an intense relationship!

Robbie explained: 'There are scripts I pick up and say, "There's no reason why she's taking her clothes off, that's just stupid, it's just nudity for the sake of nudity."That I do not agree with, ever.

'But when the nudity is warranted, I don't think there's anything shameful in that. If it's justified and the character would do it, then it should be there.'

Margot insists she never had an embarrassing teenage crush on her co-star, who rose to fame in 1997's romantic blockbuster Titanic and the film re-imagining of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, and was actually more interested in the film's doomed namesake than the hunky lead actor.

She laughed: 'I was absolutely obsessed with the Titanic - not the film, the actual boat. I'd draw diagrams about it and theorise that if it was built in a different way, it wouldn't have sunk.'

Wolf Of Wall Street hit Australian cinemas last week and already has a worldwide gross of over $170 million.